longjmp() out of nested signal handlers

Nathaniel Mishkin mishkin at apollo.uucp
Mon Apr 11 23:26:00 AEST 1988


In article <122 at csanta.UUCP> greg at csanta.UUCP (Greg Comeau) writes:
>In article <4609 at june.cs.washington.edu> pardo at uw-june.UUCP (David Keppel) writes:
>The problem that occurs with longjmp() is not within the function itself,
>but with any side-effects that may occur because of the longjmp().
>(This BTW, only happens to be spelled out in dpANSI, but has been true
>even without that being said since its first implementations).  For instance,
>within library functions that you don't have source code to (or even your own
>routines that you do have source code to), a given routine may be setting an
>external variable for later use or maybe let's say as a semaphore.  If a
>longjump occurs after the setting of the variable but before it's put to any
>use, then you're in trouble.
>
>Another quite obtuse reason is that the corresponding setjmp() may be
>called in a line of code where it was part of a subexpression.  Yickie
>poo for that one!

Apollo defines a package called PFM (Process Fault Manager) to deal with
this sort of problem.  The two primitives relevant to this discussion
are "pfm_$cleanup" and "pfm_$signal".  They are analogous to "setjmp"
and "longjmp" except they are "stacked".  Basically, you use them like:

    boolean SomeImportantStateVariable = false;

    foo()
    {
        pfm_$cleanup_rec crec;

        status = pfm_$cleanup(crec);
        if (status.all != pfm_$cleanup_set) {           /* first time? */
            SomeImportantStateVariable = false;         /* No, restore state */
            pfm_$signal(status);                        /* resignal */ 
        }
        else {
            SomeImportantStateVariable = true;
            /* ... Do some important stuff ... */
            SomeImportantStateVariable = false;
            pfm_$rls_cleanup(crec);
        }
    }

(Lisp people should recognize this as something like UNWIND-PROTECT.)

"pfm_$cleanup" returns the first time with the constant value "cleanup
set" (ala "setjmp" returning 0).  It returns the second time with the
integer value "thrown" by a "pfm_$signal".  "pfm_$signal" causes a long
jump to the site of the most recent "pfm_$cleanup".  "pfm_$signal" can
be called explicitly (like "setjmp").  Also, The various Unix signals
are automatically turned into calls to "pfm_$signal" if no signal handler
exists.  Cleanup handlers (the term for the "then" clause of the above
"if" statement) can either choose to resignal by calling "pfm_$signal"
or eat the signal and continue process as that level.  Generally, you're
supposed to resignal unless you recognize the signal that was thrown.
         
I won't make any argument for this being syntactically "pretty", but
it is at least conceptually the right thing.  (I'd like language support
for exception handling, but I don't get to pick these things.)

As part of making Apollo's Network Computing System (NCS) portable, I
had to deal with making a portable subset of PFM.  NCS supports a remote
procedure call (RPC) facility and depends on the above cleanup mechanism.
When you make a call to a remote procedure, if the target of the call
doesn't respond, NCS raises an exception using PFM.  The remote call
looks syntactically like a local call (you're calling a local stub)
so even if we thought it was the right thing to indicate call failure by
returning some "error status" (we don't), we can't since we don't get to
pick the signature of the remote procedure.  Checking global status
variables (like "errno") for failure indications is also forbidden
if you ever want your software to work in an environment where there
are multiple threads of control per address space (we do).

It turns out that implementing the necessary parts of PFM on vanilla
Unix systems via "setjmp/longjmp" was pretty trivial.  (We're talking
300 lines of code here.)  Really, all PFM amounts to is a consistent
and disciplined use of "setjmp/lonjmp".  I think I can post the source
(to some appropriate group) if anyone expresses interest.

By the way, the vanilla Unix implementation of PFM does in fact depend
on the "yicky poo" use of a "setjmp" inside an expression.  "pfm_$cleanup"
is:

    #define pfm_$cleanup(crec) \
        pfm_$_cleanup(setjmp(crec.buf), &crec)

So far, I've found two compilers/runtimes that don't handle this right.
For them, I write "pfm_$cleanup" as:

    #define pfm_$cleanup(crec) ( \
        pfm_$global_setjmp_value = setjmp(crec.buf), \
        pfm_$_cleanup(pfm_$global_setjmp_value, &crec) \
    )

at the cost of introducing a yicky poo global variable.  (Hey, I can't
fix *all* of Unix's problems at once!)
-- 
                    -- Nat Mishkin
                       Apollo Computer Inc.
                       Chelmsford, MA
                       {decvax,mit-eddie,umix}!apollo!mishkin



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